Evening Star Newspaper, September 7, 1928, Page 18

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sO Celebrating the Brazilian Independence.: HE Ambassador of Brazil, Senhor S. Gurgel do Amaral, was the honor guest at a luncheon given today by the American Brazilian < Association of New York in cele- Pration of the 106th anniversary of the Pproclamation of Brazilian independ- ence. Also guests at the luncheon were fhe director general of the Pan-Ameri- €an Union, Dr. Leo S. Rowe: the mili- fary attache of the Brazilian embassy, Capt. Frederico Villar, and the Brazil- fan consul general in New York, Senhor Bebastrio Sampaio. - The Ambassador will be the honor est at a dinner tonight at the Astor otel in celebration of the day. | Senator and Jesse H. Metcalf | have arrived in Washington from their | home in Providence, R. I, and are pass- ing some time at the Carlton. Representative J. Will Taylor has tlosed his apartment at 2540 Massa- Bhusetts avenue and left for his home | in Lafollette, Tenn. | Eenhorita Villar Engaged to Mr. Lengruber. © The military attache of the Brazilian #mbassy and Senhora Villar announce | the engagement of their daughter, | Senhorita Emilia Carmen Villar, to Mr. Oswald Lengruber of New York and Brazil. The wedding will take place in March in Petropolis, near Rio de Janerio. Senhora Villar and her daughters, Sen- horita Emilia Carmen Villar and Sen- horita Maria de Loudres Villar. are now | in Rio de Janeiro after spending the Summer in Paris. Capt. Villar will return to his apart- ment in Stoneleigh Court the end of the week from New York. The Undersecretar of the Treasury, Mr. Ogden L. Mills, will be joined short- Jv by Mrs. Mills and her children, who ?l\'; left Newport and are now in New York. CIETY. Anniversary of Bates, ir., son of Mr. and Mrs. Bates of | Morristown, N. J., were married at noon | today in St. Bernard’s Church, in Ber- nardsville, N. J. The ceremony was fol- lowed by a reception and wedding | breakfast at Brookwood, the country | home of the bride's parents in Far Hills. Chaplain and Mrs. Allison Hayes have returned to their apartment at 2540 Massachusetts avenue. Baron Erik W. Stiernstedt, secretary general of the Swedish Red Cross So- | ciety of Stockholm, and Baroness Stjernstedt have taken an apartment at the Carlton for several weeks for con- ferences with Judge John Barton Pavyne, president of the American Red Cross. Borden-Turned Marriage Yesterday in Richmond Announced. Mr. and Mrs. William Jackson Turner announce the marriage of their daugh- ter Caro to Mr. Sam Wheatley Borden, son of Mrs. Thomas S. Borden of Edge- moor and the late Mr. Borden, yesterday in Richmond, ‘The bride is a sister of Mrs. William Hughes Stokes and Miss Kitty Turner of this city, of Mr. Ashley Turner of hiladelphia and Mr. Wiiliam Jackson ‘Turner, Jr., of New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont will en- tertain at luncheon Monday in their villa, Belcourt, at Newport, in celebra- tion of Perry day. which will celebrate the anniversary of Perry's battle of Lake Erie. Mr. Belmont is a descendant of the hero of the battle, Commodore | Oliver Hazard Perry. | Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Sidwell have returned from the Oakdale Club at Oak- | dale, Long Island, and are in their| home on Wisconsin avenue, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Howerton, who have been in the mountains of | THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 7. 1928 SOCIETY Brazilian Envoy Honor Guest at Fete SENORITA EMELIA CARMEN VILLAR, Whose parents, the military attache of the Brazillan embassy and Senora Villar, | announce her engagement to Mr. Oswald Lengruber of New York and Rio de| §8 T Iier home at 3808 northwest after a visit to her son, Mr. Monroe Nash, in Portsmouth, Va. Mrs. Francis G. Newlands is passing a few days at the Gladstone Hotel in New York City. Miss Hoover Married to Mr. Parker Last Evening. | The marriage of Miss Margaret Cur- riden Hoover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs | George F. Hoover, to Mr. Clarence Le Roy Parker, son of Mrs. Clarence Le Roy Parker, took place last evening at 8 o'clock in the United Brethren Mc- morial Church, the Rev. Simpson B. Daugherty officiating. The arrange- | ments for the wedding were charming in detail and a profusion of gladioli ard asters, massed with clematis vine and palms, formed an effective background | for the wedding party. As the guests | were assembling Mr. Burrus Willlams gave selections of organ music. The bride was escorted by her father, who gave her in marriage. Her wed- ding gown was of white satin, fashioned along bouffant lines, with an uneven hemline, bordered with rows of tulle. Her tulle veil, arranged softly about her face, fell from a cap of duchess lace, and scattered over the veil at the back were clusters of orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Ruth Campbell, was the maid of honor and the bridesmaids were Miss Elizabeth Brandenburg, Miss Julia Den- ning, Miss Mary Temple Hill and Miss Charlotte Parker. They all wore chiffon gowns in rainbow colors, made with uneven hemline with full draperies at the left sides. The maid of honor car- ried an arm boquet of yellow roses and the other attendants had bouquets of Autumn flovers. Thirteenth street NFINITE joy must come ‘from a shoe so graceful in line, 80 soft in texture, s0 comfort- able at every step... Mr. James Donald MacWilllam of Wilkes-Barre, Pa, was the best man and the ushers were Mr. Smith W. Brookhart, jr.. of Iowa and Washing- ton; Mr. Otis Graeser of Cincinnati, Mr. Herman P. Rassback of Philadel- phia and Mr. Frederick Windisch of New York. Mrs. Hoover, mother of the bride, wore a printed georgette crepe gown in_shades of rose and gray. Following a reception in the home of the bride’s parents. at 1707 Holly street, Mr. Parker and his bride left for a wedding trip, Mrs. Parker wear- ing a light tan georgette crepe gown, with a close-fitting hat and other ac- cessories to match. They will be at home upon their return at Corcoran Court. Among the out-of-town guests were Mrs. Martha L. Schneider of Cran- ford, N. J.; Mrs. J. D. MacWilliams of | Wilkes-Barre, Pa, and Mrs. Otis| Graeser of Cincinnati, | Mrs. Clarence M. Busch, nntk\nall; president of the League of American | Pen Women, was the guest of Mrs William Laird Dunlop, jr., at luncheon | vesterday in_the presidential dining room of the Mayflower, 1 Mr. and Mrs. Lee Duman Latimer ar spending the week at Pine Orchard Conn,, after a motor trip through Penn- | sylvania and New York, and will return | o Washington after visiting several | sorts on the New Jersey coast. i Miss Phyllis Hull of Bronxville, N. Y.. whose marriage to Mr. William L. Kost, of Washington will take place Tuesday, was entertained at luncheon yesterday | by Miss Elinor Johnson of New Rochellr SOCIETY.’ whose other guests were those who will attend Miss Hull at her wedding. Mrs. Oliver Newman was a luncheon hostess yesterday in the presidential dining room of the Mayflower, having five in her party. Mrs. and Mrs. Loren Herbert, Mrs. J. A. De Lauder and Miss Agnes Merchant | have returned to their homes after a| two-week motor trip along the Atlantic Coast. They visited Atlantic City, Cape May and Wildwood, N. J. Mrs. Linnie M. urne of 2027 Hillyer ’Open All Day Saturda SWorzYNS 716 13th St. N.W. Just Abore G Street SALE! Children's New) School Dresses Colorful wash mate- 98 rials in a variety of styles. Sizes 7 to 14 vears. 124 F “Gold’s for Smartest Hats in Town” place is recuperating from a serious ll- ness at Hotel Traymore, Atlantic City, where she will remain until Octiber. Mrs. Cary Hutchinson has closed her cottage at Virginia Beach and is spend- ing a few days in Washington at the I\!av lower on her way to her home in York City Mrs. Hutchinson lived in Washington at one time, her former husband being the late Judge Louis (Continued on Nine L 4 SRR R R 5 Until 7:30 SEA FOOD 7 5 c DINNER Or Your Choice of Our Regular '\lrrm Fddebdetobdedebds T Phone—Columbia 5042 ey L S i e Street New Fall Hats Very Special at western North Carolina for a month, | Janiero. —Harris & Ewing Photo. - Mrs. W. Irving Glover, wife of the Assistant Postmaster General, and daughter Frances have returned to iheir apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel, after spending the Summer on a horseback tour through Zion and Bryce Canyons and the last six weeks at Eagles Mere, Pa. Their sons, Thomas and Warren, have also returned from @ Summer camp at Colorado Springs. ‘The newiy appointed second secretary of the Canadian legation, Mr. Kenneth P. Kirkwood, has arrived in Washington and taken up his duties at the legation. M. Kirkwood has taken a suite at the Hotel Commodore temporarily. ‘The attache of the Swedish legation, Baron Schell, is again in New York, at the Ambassador, from the Summer ! legation at Williamstown, Mass. “ Judge and Mrs. Dike, accompanied by “their young son, have arrived in Wash- | dngton from their home in New York ::'l‘t; and are at the Carlton for a short Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Cornelius Van- | derbilt have returned to Newport on their yacht Winchester from New York. “where they accompanied Gen. John J. | “Pershing, who was their house guest for several days. | 7 Gen. and Mrs. Vanderbilt will enter- Aain at diner and luncheon tomorrow. ‘ % Comdr. and Mrs. A. S. Hickey have | #rrived in Washington from Norfolk. Va., and are at the Carlton for a short ‘guy. = Capt. and Mrs. Howard M. Yost will #ail from New York September 14 for a gruise in the Caribbean Sea. £ Miss Victoria Frelihghuysen, daighter f former Senator and Mrs. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, and Mr. John Grenville will return to Washington Saturday. Mrs. Watson Freeman Clark returned yesterday from her Summer home at Sandwich, on Cape Cod, Mass, to attend the marriage tomorrow of her niece, Miss Margaret Richardson, to Mr. Leonidas Irving McDougle. Miss Charlotte Freeman Clark is spending a few days in New York on her way from Cape Cod and will join her moth- ar here tomorrow in time for the wed- ing. Mrs. James William Orme, her daughters, Miss Mary Eleanor Orme and Miss Kathleen Walsh Orme, and her son, Mr. Robert Cherry Orme, are passing several weeks at the Gibson Island Club, Gibson Island, Md. Miss Helen E. Clifford has gone to her old home in Evanston, Iil, where she will be a bridesmaid at the wed- ding of Miss Katherine Paine to Lieut. George Van Horne Moseley, U. 8. A, which will take place Tuesday. Mrs. Raymond Belmont of Middle- i a few days in Washington and are at | the Mayflower. They will motor to their Summer home, the Williston House, in Norwich, Vt., and in the early Autumn This newest Forsythe fall etyle, beckons Walk in beauty.” In'patent leather, STETSON SHOE SHOP Is Now Displaying SMART FOOTWEAR } at Raleigh Haberdasher | 1310 F Street College Apparel Pre-Requisites Frocks THAT SMAck OF SMARTNESS EW scenes—new faces—new friends—new envi- ronment: all these. tend to send the matriculate off to school self-conscious beyond words...Let her apparel introduce her and through sheer exalta- they will return to their home on Pinckney street in Boston. harles black suede, Java e i o spike _owh. 3 burg, Va, is at the Carlton for a few days, accompanied by Miss Winifred Maddux. M The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Windiate returned to this country yes- terday on the Homeric and are now in their home at Kensington, Md. Mr. and Mrs, Jerome Napoleon Bon- aparte, who occupied the Band Box at Newport earlier in the season, have been at the Muenchinger-King for a short time and left Newport today to motor to New York. Mrs. Le Baron Carlton Colt and her son and daughter, Mr. G. A. Converse Colt and Miss Edith Colt, are spending Nash has returned to The Promenade “An Unusual Place to Dine.” 1116 F St—Second Floor Shaw & Brown Building Table D’Hote Dinner Extraordinaire $1.00 & $1.50 Luncheon—Tea—Dinner and “After the Show” 11:30 AM. Until Midnight 1223 F MATL ORDLERY } to thes HEAD A SPECIAL ~shoc Foor™ WASHINGTON'S FINEST MEN'S WEAR STORE Friday and Saturday— WEAR. St. N.W. OMP LY hYLLLD SHOWING Large and Small Headsizes Soleils, velours, felts, combinations . . . Fash- ions sponsored by Paris. A collection of everything new for Autumn. For chic miss; for youthful matrons. All colors. 14 F St Unprecedented Savings Opportunity WOMEN’S & MISSES’ Fur-Trimmed WINTER COATS Also Smartest Ready-to-Wear Hats 85 to $35. tion of her personal loveliness put her at her ease...Nothing will help so vitally as a wardrobe in- clusive of smart and serviceable frocks...Just this the ERLE- In The Paris Manner Exclusive With Us OF OUR EXCLUSIVE 3 Outstanding {“ BACHER Salons have in mind \ in presenting three of the newest Eon b arrivals. This two-piece model of fine nov- elty bordered tweed comes in black and white, tan and white and green and white mixtures. Blouse adorned with self- flower and smart leather belt. 839.50 Three-piece sport ensemble of import- ed flannel and jersey. Cardigan jacket of fancy stripe import- ed jersey. Sweater jumper of jersey with bands of flan- nel, while the flannel skirt is made with the new circular in- sets. One-piece dress, with new convertible 1227 F St. NW. “House of Courtesy” Francin® Hats Agnes— Alphonsine— Newest Creations Exact Copies of Their Latest Paris Successes ‘10 Deftly fashioned of imported soleil— French velvets— Alphonsine’s new off- the - forehead hat— —feature a e COATS New Creations for Sports and Travel- $69.75 Twelve Styles for Women and Misses The most original ideas in plain and bor- dered Tweed were im- portccl for the making of these captivating Coats so fine, fashions so smart and values so unusual that we are con- fident our patrons will see the advantage of se- lecting a handsome Win. ter coat from one of these groups. Beautifully tailored of fine fabrics, adorned with luxurious, deep furs, in every new color. Misses’ and women’s sizes. Cl’eatifln!. The newest Autumn shades of tan and b rown are {ca‘ tured. Every coat is richly embellished with a large fur collar of Raccoon, Wolf or o] New FALL collar that can be worn high or low. Made in Ombre plaid, with metal but- tons and buckle. The skirt has stitched front pleats. Available d\n Narmari% green, brown, navy an K cocoa $25 DRESSES $15 Copies and adapta- tions from ahbhroad. Chiffons, satins. sport jerseys. The season's favored tones—all sizes. Beaver. The stylings originated in Paris. The idea of selling them at such an excep- tionally low price originated with us—and we're sure that feminine Washington will show its approval. Agnes’ longside poke —and many others. Come and See These New Hats at o F ST. (THIRD FLOOR) Srlebacher “Jeminine cApparel of Individuality TWELVETEN TWELVETWELVE F STREET THE WOMEN'S SHOP OF Raleigh Haberdasher 1310 F Street ™¢

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